And then you'll see all kinds of “Chinese Linux” being hyped up by the domestic media; their main advantage is Chinese text handling. But as mentioned in the previous article, if you want to use Chinese, Windows 2000 is best. Actually, I think something a senior from the old Class 7 said to me was very good: “(For us,) seeing Chinese on a computer is itself a very strange thing.” If you're here with the goal of learning computers, then there's no way you can avoid reading English documentation. Even Microsoft's documentation, the programming-related docs, the latest ones are all in English. Of course, for going on BBSes, browsing Chinese web pages, and so on, an English dist can do that too.
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KO says:
The above text was seen on Tsinghua's LINUX board.
But I deeply agree with one sentence in it.
It's this one: seeing Chinese on a computer is itself a very strange thing
I think it's the same in DOS. Hehe...
You must know a little English...
You MUST know a little English.
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
KO says:
The above text was seen on Tsinghua's LINUX board.
But I deeply agree with one sentence in it.
It's this one: seeing Chinese on a computer is itself a very strange thing
I think it's the same in DOS. Hehe...
You must know a little English...
You MUST know a little English.
ko20010214
=================================
大功告成,打个Kiss!
ko20010214@MSN.com
神州优雅Q300C
Intel CeleronM 370处理器 | 256MbDDR内存
40G硬盘 | USB2.0 | IEEE 1394
13.3 ' WXGA 宽屏(16:10) | COMBO光驱
10/100M网卡 | 四合一读卡器
=================================
大功告成,打个Kiss!
ko20010214@MSN.com
神州优雅Q300C
Intel CeleronM 370处理器 | 256MbDDR内存
40G硬盘 | USB2.0 | IEEE 1394
13.3 ' WXGA 宽屏(16:10) | COMBO光驱
10/100M网卡 | 四合一读卡器




